[EN] 12 Hot Data Center Startups To Watch

Once upon a time a corporate data center included software and hardware from a handful of big-name companies and no one else.

But there’s a major revolution going on. Companies are shipping more and more apps into the cloud and they are revamping their own data centers to be faster, more efficient, using new forms of databases, building what is known as “private data centers.”

The result is a wide-open door for startups offering fresh technology.

Maxta: Turning ordinary servers into fast cloud storage

Company: Maxta

Funding raised: $35 million total, including a $25 million closed this month, from Tenaya Capital, Intel Capital and Andreessen Horowitz.

Why it’s hot: Maxta takes ordinary servers and turns them into sophisticated storage, eliminating the need to buy expensive storage from companies like EMC and NetApp.

There’s a lot of startups doing the same, each in its own way. We like Maxta because of the track record of its founder CEO, Yoram Novick.

He previously founded Topio sold to NetApp in 2006 for $160 million and he spent several years working on storage at IBM before that.

MemSQL: An alternative to Oracle’s database with Facebook’s roots

Company: MemSQL

Funding raised: $45 million, including a $35 million round in January from investors Accel Partners, Khosla Ventures, Data Collective, First Round Capital.

Why it’s hot: MemSQL was founded by two former Facebook engineers Eric Frenkiel and Nikita Shamgunov, who walked away from their Facebook jobs, and a pile of pre-IPO stock options, to found their company.

MemSQL offers a commercial version of a database similar to the one Facebook built for itself. (Before Facebook, Shamgunov worked at Microsoft building its database product.)

This is an “in-memory database,” meaning it runs really fast in a computer’s memory. But it uses low-cost commodity servers, not expensive specialty servers that Oracle sells.

The young company, founded in 2011, has grabbed some impressive customers so far, including Comcast and Morgan Stanley.

Why it’s hot: PernixData is also working on making enterprise storage faster and cheaper. But it’s doing something different. With its software, and the purchase of ordinary flash storage, it makes the storage a company already owns faster and able to store more.

It was founded by two Valley data center A-listers, VMware’s former top storage exec, Satyam Vaghani and Poojan Kumar, the engineer that created Oracle’s super important product, Exadata.

Coho Data: Well-known cofounders tackling data center storage

Company: Coho Data

Funding raised: $35 million from Ignition Partners and Andreessen Horowitz

Why it’s hot: Like others on this list, Coho Data is working on making enterprise storage faster and less expensive. The month after it came out of stealth, it closed a $25 million Series B funding from Ignition Partners, and Andreessen Horowitz.

This is the new company from the folks who invented a technology called the “Xen hypervisor,” an open-source alternative to VMware’s flagship product. Citrix bought the commercial arm, XenSource in 2007 for $500 million.

Rex Computing: Low-power servers built by a child prodigy

Company: Rex Computing

Funding raised: Unknown, but Rex Computing’s cofounder, Thomas Sohmers, is a member of Peter Thiel’s startup accelerator, the 20 Under 20 Thiel Fellowship. The accelerator grants $100,000 to kids to skip college and focus on their work.

Why it’s hot: At the age of 17, Sohmers dropped out of high school to start this company with cofounder Kurt Keville. The two of them built a very powerful computer server using low-power ARM chips, the kind that run tablets and smartphones. ARM servers are a huge future trend for the data center.

Rex’s servers were also designed for Facebook’s game-changing hardware project known as the Open Compute Project. OCP is a project where big companies like Facebook and Microsoft have shared their hardware designs and opened the door for startups like Rex to sell to them.

CloudGenix: Stealthy Cisco networking startup

Company: CloudGenix

Funding raised: $9 million from Charles River Ventures and Mayfield Fund.

Why it’s hot: CloudGenix, founded in 2013, is still in super stealth mode. But we know that it’s working on a new form of networking that will make it faster to share data between data centers and offices.

CEO founder Kumar Ramachandran is a 13-year Cisco veteran who previously worked with Cisco’s wide-area networking products. Instead of competing with Cisco, his startups tech can be bolted on top of Cisco products, giving him a huge market of companies that want to keep their Cisco networking equipment while making it better.

Why it’s hot: The 2-year-old Splice is trying to do what those in the know said couldn’t be done: turn the popular big data storage technology, Hadoop, into a kind of database that competes directly with Oracle (in geek speak, a SQL RDBMS on Hadoop).

Hadoop was always billed as a new kind of big data technology that collected the kind of stuff that wouldn’t be put in a traditional database (photos, tweets, documents). It was never intended to replace the traditional database that stores precise rows and columns of data.

But this month Splice releases software to turn Hadoop into a regular database, with 15 beta customers already trying it out, it said.

CEO cofounder Monte Zweben has a long history in the tech industry. He started at NASA working with artificial intelligence and the Space Shuttle. He also founded two pre-Internet bubble companies, Red Pepper Software and Blue Martini.

Why it’s hot: They are stealth and say they won’t talk much about their product until 2015 except to say that it has something to do with data center storage and the cloud. But they’ve already landed a healthy $23.6 million round for the product and people are watching them.

Why it’s hot: The big data trend relies on a new kind of data storing tech called Hadoop. Hadoop is open source and free. Unfortunately, it’s really difficult to use. So many a company has cropped up to make Hadoop easier.

Platfora is one of those companies. Its software adds a search engine-like feature to Hadoop, to find data among massive amounts of it and to create charts.

It was founded by Ben Werther, who happened to be a college buddy of Larry Page. Sadly, he didn’t join Page to help launch Google. But before doing this startup, he worked at Siebel Systems, Microsoft, and Greenplum, an early big-data analytics startup bought by EMC in 2010.

Tintri: Storage that offers amazing flexibility

Company: Tintri

Funding raised: $135 million total, including $75 million in February on a $600 million valuation. Investors are Insight Venture Partners, Lightspeed Venture, Menlo Ventures, and NEA.

Why it’s hot: Like other vendors on this list, Trinti offers flash based enterprise storage for the data center. Trinti just came up with a unique way to move software between different vendor’s server products, with a click of a button.

It allows an app to easily move from VMware to Microsoft Hyper-V. If it works as advertised, enterprises should love it.

Why it’s hot: With that latest investment, Actifio was valued at $1 billion. It came up with a new way to help enterprises find and delete duplicate copies of data while making sure that data is always available.

It’s not the only company offering this tech, known as “data de-duplication” but it has grabbed some powerful allies to sell its wares, including a partnership with IBM in February.

Why it’s hot: Instead of going public, Pure Storage opted to extend its time as a private company and do another investment round.

In April, it raised a whopping $225 million round that valued the company at over $3 billion. That valuation is bigger than the market caps of two of its public rivals: Fusion-IO and Violin Memory.

Pure Storage makes flash-memory enterprise storage systems and EMC has been looking over its shoulder at this startup. Over the course of 2013, EMC sued six former employees that joined Pure Storage, and then sued Pure Storage over the hiring of 44 former EMC employees.